Monday, August 25, 2008

Chocolate brownies

Chocolate brownie

This one's from the Guardian...

Jane Asher's American brownies

Makes 10

200ml vegetable oil
150g golden granulated sugar
100g dark brown soft sugar
2 tsps vanilla extract
3 medium eggs
60g cocoa powder
100g self-raising flour
¼ tsp salt
¼ tsp sodium bicarbonate
100g chopped hazelnuts or walnuts (optional)

Preheat the oven to 180C (165C fan-assisted) 350F, gas mark 4. Prepare a 20 x 25 cm (or 23 cm square) baking tin. Put all the ingredients into a large mixing bowl and beat well together. Spoon the mixture into the prepared tin and bake for 25-30 minutes, depending on how chewy you like your brownies. Let the brownies cool in the tin, then turn out and decorate.

For my latest batch I replaced some of the hazelnuts with chopped up good-quality dark chocolate and some raisins.

Risottos

Two risotto recipes for today's post.

Mushroom risotto

The first one is my regular recipe for risotto and comes from Nigel Slater's "Real Food".

Leek and Taleggio Risotto

Serves 2 generously
50g butter
2 large leeks, chopped and rinsed
2 large cloves of garlic, peeled and sliced
a little dried oregano
225g arborio rice
900ml hot vegetable stock (though I usually find this a bit too much)
225g taleggio or other soft, creamy cheese such as Camembert, cut into thick slices

"Put the butter into a shallow, heavy-bottomed pan and add the leeks and garlic. Cook over a moderate heat, stirring occasionally, until the leeks are soft. Don't hurry this; let the leeks cook slowly for about fifteen to twenty minutes, but stop cooking before they colour."

"Stir in the oregano, a teaspoon or so will do, and the rice. Pour in three ladles of hot stock and stir. Leave to simmer gently, stirring regularly, until the stock has almost all been soaked up by the rice. Add more stock and leave to cook once more, at a gentle pace, then add more when that too has gone. It will stick if you forget to stir it. The rice will be plump and tender after about eighteen to twenty minutes. Taste it to see if it is done to your liking; it should have a bit of bite left in it but should be quite tender."

"Stir in the cheese at the last minute - it will melt creamily. Check for seasoning; it will need both salt and black pepper."


My notes:

I use this recipe as my staple risotto recipe - basically I use it for the amount of rice and stock but with various different flavours. Typically I'll use some onion as the base, rather than the leek, and often a good portion of grated pecorino or parmesan or even cream rather than the taleggio. Then the main part - mushrooms, prawns, asparagus, tomatoes...y'know, whatever you like. For mushroom risotto, use some fresh mushrooms and some dried porcini - soak the porcini first and use the remaining liquid in the stock.


The second recipe is slightly different and comes from Matthew Fort's "Eating Up Italy", in which he samples food while riding around Italy on a Vespa.

Risotto Con La Zucca

Serves 6 (probably more like 4 as a main)

50g butter
1 litre vegetable stock
1 small onion
1 stick of celery
400g pumpkin
400g risotto rice
Grated parmesan

"Melt the butter in the pan in which you are going to cook the risotto. Bring the stock or water to the boil in another pan. Finely dice the onion and celery and saute in the melted butter. Add the pumpkin, cut into chunks, and the rice. Turn in the butter for 4-5 minutes. Pour the boiing stock into the rice and pumpkin pan all at once. Lower the heat to cook the rice slowly. Do not stir. Cover with the lid and cook for 15 minutes. Remove the lid. The contents should be perfectly cooked, and quite dry. Beat in plenty of grated Parmesan."

This made one of the best risottos I've done, but we were in a flat in Tuscany at the time, which might have had something to do with it. It's a bit simpler as you don't have to add stock and stir as you go.

Monday, August 4, 2008

Visiting the celebrity chefs

Rick Stein's Seafood Restaurant, Padstow

Well, we didn't actually see any of them, but when we recently spent a week down in Cornwall I made it my mission to go Rick Stein's Seafood Restaurant in Padstow and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall's River Cottage Store and Canteen in Axminster.

Grilled scallops with hazelnut and coriander butter

We were staying near Padstow so it was pretty easy to go to the seafood restaurant though I guess you might need to book fairly far ahead. We chose the tasting menu which consisted of five courses of seafood, from lobster salad to escalopes of halibut. It was good but I could have done with a bit more variation and excitement. However I did like the smart and relaxed atmosphere at the restaurant. Rick Stein also owns four or five other cafes and restaurants in Padstow, which is only a small fishing town. But having walked five miles to get to his fish and chip shop for lunch one day we weren't best pleased to arrive at 2:31 and discover it closed at 2:30.

River Cottage Store and Canteen

The River Cottage Canteen isn't on the farm you see on the TV shows, it's in the centre of Axminster, but that makes it a good stopping off place for lunch on the way down to Cornwall. There's a shop with local food for sale and a cafe/canteen at the back with a small-ish menu - it was pretty good food though a bit pricey for lunch. We liked it so much that we stopped there on the way down and the way back.

my food photos

www.flickr.com

recent bookmarks

about this blog

I'm Tristan Ferne and I'm a coder/producer/manager and I run an R&D team for BBC Audio & Music Interactive - BBC Radio Labs. You can contact me at tristanferne at yahoo[dot]co[dot]uk

Why is it called cookin'/relaxin'? They're the titles of two of a series of Miles Davis albums which also describe some of my favourite things.

View my complete profile

other blogs

cookin'/relaxin' My main blog

  © Blogger template 'Photoblog' by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP